Gough v. Satterlee

32 A.D. 33, 52 N.Y.S. 492
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 32 A.D. 33 (Gough v. Satterlee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gough v. Satterlee, 32 A.D. 33, 52 N.Y.S. 492 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

Cullen, J.:

This action is brought to recover a policy of fire insurance issued by the defendants as attorneys in fact for fifteen individual underwriters, the defendants being among the underwriters. The policy is of the kind commonly known as a Lloyds policy, and contains provisions limiting the liability of the underwriters thereon. Each underwriter is liable only for bistro rata share of the loss, and in no event for the default of his associates. His liability was further limited by a provision that it should not exceed, on the policy issued and all policies then or thereafter in force after the application of the total unexpended premiums, the sum of $5,000 ; and if by reason of a fire or fires several risks insured under policies issued by the underwriters should become payable, then that all policyholders who sustain loss from such fire or fires should be entitled to recover as against each underwriter only that proportion of the adjusted claim oh each policy which the total liability of each underwriter should bear to the aggregate of such claims. The policy recites that each of the underwriters has deposited with the attorneys the sum of $1,500, amounting in the aggregate to the sum of $22,500, which sum, with all premiums expended and undivided, were to be held by the attorneys as a trust fund for the payment of claims under the policy in suit and under all other policies, and the attorneys were declared to be, with reference to such fund, trustees of. an express trust. It was further provided that, in the event of litigation, no action should be brought against the individual underwriters '‘ until after suit shall have been brought against the attorneys for the underwriters, and for the full amount of the loss or claim, or full and complete relief claimed under this policy, and each of the underwriters hereon hereby agrees to abide the final determination of any such action, suit or proceeding [36]*36so brought as fixing his individual responsibility under this policy. Judgment entered in such action against the said attorneys as such trustees as aforesaid shall b& satisfied out of such -trust fund in the hands of' said attorneys. . If such trust fund shall be insufficient to satisfy such judgment, then the assured may begin and maintain actions against the individual underwriters hereon upon their liability under this policy, as hereinbefore expressed and limited, upon their agreement to abide the final determination of any suit brought against the said attorneys as such trustees as aforesaid.” . In their answer the defendants averred' the existence of claims for losses under other policies of insurance issued by- the defendants and their associate underwriters of the Lloyds of Hew York city, and also of claims for rebates for returned premiums on- cancellation of policies aggregating more than $100,000; and that a number of the underwriters had paid as their proportionate share.of the losses so insured large sums of money; that by reason of these facts the plaintiff was not entitled to recover the whole amount of his loss, but only his pro rata share of the whole amount for which the underwriter’s were answerable under the provisions above recited. On the trial the defendants offered proof to sustain these allegations of their answer.' This the court excluded, and the correctness of this ruling of the court is the only question presented on this appeal.

The provisions and limitations of this policy are very complicated, and their meaning obscure and doubtful. As we construe it (and in this construction we follow the trial court), the policyholder is entitled to recover of the attorneys the whole amount of his loss, which, in the language already quoted from the policy, “ shall be satisfied out of such trust fund in the hands of said attorneys.” Then if the trust fund is insufficient to satisfy the claim, actions may be maintained against the individual underwriters. That no accounting is to be taken of the trust fund and of the claims against it, and that no apportionment is- to be had, is made plain by the fact that an execution against the underwriters as trustees must first be issued and returned unsatisfied in whole or part before an action can be brought against-the individual underwriters. The provision as to the issue of an execution is wholly inconsistent- with the idea that the action is to be one in equity to administer a trust fund. The real intent of this policy and the practice contemplated by the par[37]*37ties was that a common-law action should be brought against the attorneys the same as if those attorneys were an independent corporation which had made the contract of insurance, and then resort be had against the individual underwriters only in case of the inability of the attorneys or the funds in their hands to respond to the claims made against them. I do not understand the appellants to controvert this view. Whether the contract of the parties could make this scheme fully operative it is not necessary to consider. It has been held by the Appellate Divisions of the first and third departments that where the attorneys- are also underwriters (which is the present case) an action on the policy will lie against them (Leiter v. Beecher, 2 App. Div. 577; New Jersey & Pennsylvania Concentrating Works v. Ackermann, 6 id. 540 ; Lawrence v. Schaefer, 20 id. 80); though it has also been held by the Common Pleas that where the attorneys are not underwriters the action cannot be maintained. (Knorr v. Bates, 14 Misc. Rep. 501; Farjeon v. Fogg, 16 id. 219.) Therefore, an objection that the complaint and evidence failed to make out a cause of action would not be well founded; and that is the only objection that can be taken for the first time on appeal. Ho question was raised in the trial court as to- the form of the judgment or character of the recovery. Judgment was awarded against the defendants as attorneys for the underwriters for the whole amount of the plaintiff’s loss. If the construction of the policy which we have adopted is correct, it follows that the matters set up in the defendants’ answer do not operate to restrict the recovery in this action, but only to limit the liability of the underwriters in actions that may hereafter be brought against them.

It is, however, insisted that as the contract provides for the determination in this action of the respective liabilities of the several-underwriters ; and as they have agreed that the final determination of the action shall fix their individual responsibilities, it was in cum-bent on the court to determine the existence and amount of those liabilities. The proposition is substantially this: That the agreement of the parties and the fact that other. persons not parties to the record have stipulatéd'to abide the judgment, renders it the duty of the court to decide issues not- relevant to, or necessary for, the determination of the particular claim or cause of action of the plaintiff against the defendants in the'suit before it. , It is said in Matter [38]*38of N. Y., L. & W. R. R. Co. (98 N. Y. 447) that “ Parties by then-stipulations may, in many ways, make the law for any legal proceeding to which they are parties, which not only binds them, but which the courts are bound to enforce. They .may stipulate away statutory, and even constitutional, rights.” But this doctrine is not to be construed so broadly as to permit parties to overturn the established system of administration of justice, and set up an independent scheme of their own for that purpose.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
32 A.D. 33, 52 N.Y.S. 492, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gough-v-satterlee-nyappdiv-1898.